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Dr. Clare Cannon
University of California, Davis

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0 Climate Change
0 Environmental Justice
0 Feminist Theory
0 gender inequality
0 ecology & society

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Journal article
Published: 08 July 2021 in City
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In this article, I synthesize insights from urban growth machine and risk society theories to advance scholarship that furthers an understanding of why and how environmental racism, in this case rebuilding a school on toxic land in a Black community, is produced during prolonged recovery to disaster. Using a single, embedded historical case, I focus on the redevelopment of the Booker T. Washington High School in the heart of New Orleans, LA with confirmed worrisome concentrations of highly toxic and carcinogenic elements and the associated health risks conferred to majority Black children who will attend. Using an explanation building technique, I find explanatory support for recovery machine theories that argue post-disaster funding is used to propel growth machine dynamics. In other words, reinvestment creates environmental risks that amount to environmental racism. Building on this theory, I illustrate through the case how redevelopment of post-disaster New Orleans manufactures environmental risk and how local groups experience that risk differently adding to sociological theorizations on the contested nature of risk. I discuss implications of the intersections of urban growth, environmental risk, and inequalities for cities.

ACS Style

Clare Cannon. The case of Booker T. Washington High School. City 2021, 1 -17.

AMA Style

Clare Cannon. The case of Booker T. Washington High School. City. 2021; ():1-17.

Chicago/Turabian Style

Clare Cannon. 2021. "The case of Booker T. Washington High School." City , no. : 1-17.

Journal article
Published: 22 April 2021 in Partner Abuse
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Though usually framed in the context of ideological and political processes, the failure of domestic violence perpetrator programs to embrace research-supported practice may also be influenced by a widespread unwillingness to use public funds for that purpose. This policy analysis examines the links among federal policy, state implementation, organizational structure, and funding sources of perpetrator service-providing organizations. Those links reveal reciprocal relationships among conservative and ostensibly feminist views of domestic violence within an implied policy framework justifying public underfunding of perpetrator treatment programs. Placed within the current hyper-politicized context of US Federal governance and policy, this analysis identifies advancements in perpetrator treatment in several state governments as harbingers of potential movement toward research-supported practice.

ACS Style

Clare Cannon; Kenneth Corvo; Fred Buttell; John Hamel. Barriers to Advancing Evidence-Based Practice in Domestic Violence Perpetrator Treatment in the United States: Ideology, Public Funding, or Both? Partner Abuse 2021, 12, 221 -237.

AMA Style

Clare Cannon, Kenneth Corvo, Fred Buttell, John Hamel. Barriers to Advancing Evidence-Based Practice in Domestic Violence Perpetrator Treatment in the United States: Ideology, Public Funding, or Both? Partner Abuse. 2021; 12 (2):221-237.

Chicago/Turabian Style

Clare Cannon; Kenneth Corvo; Fred Buttell; John Hamel. 2021. "Barriers to Advancing Evidence-Based Practice in Domestic Violence Perpetrator Treatment in the United States: Ideology, Public Funding, or Both?" Partner Abuse 12, no. 2: 221-237.

Review
Published: 16 March 2021 in Energy Research & Social Science
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This article presents a narrative review of recent energy research that engages with critical sexuality, gender, and feminist theories. We find that these important theories are generally considered by the literature in three ways – through identifying and framing the problem, designing implementation and governance processes, and offering long-term visioning and ideals. Emerging scholarship advances valuable insights on the unequal treatment of women and other minority groups. However, our review also highlights the need for more transversal ways – i.e., reading across disciplinary silos and multiple intersecting social identities – to interrogate the impacts of systemic oppression on energy issues. We argue that such a transversal approach to energy studies should prioritize engendering an epistemic community that promotes a relational awareness of historic and contemporary structures of oppression, facilitate innovative methodological approaches to research, and speak to more radical societal visions through mobilization and activism.

ACS Style

Clare E.B. Cannon; Eric K. Chu. Gender, sexuality, and feminist critiques in energy research: A review and call for transversal thinking. Energy Research & Social Science 2021, 75, 102005 .

AMA Style

Clare E.B. Cannon, Eric K. Chu. Gender, sexuality, and feminist critiques in energy research: A review and call for transversal thinking. Energy Research & Social Science. 2021; 75 ():102005.

Chicago/Turabian Style

Clare E.B. Cannon; Eric K. Chu. 2021. "Gender, sexuality, and feminist critiques in energy research: A review and call for transversal thinking." Energy Research & Social Science 75, no. : 102005.

Journal article
Published: 01 March 2021 in Traumatology
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ACS Style

Frederick Buttell; Clare E. B. Cannon; Katherine Rose; Regardt J. Ferreira. COVID-19 and intimate partner violence: Prevalence of resilience and perceived stress during a pandemic. Traumatology 2021, 27, 20 -28.

AMA Style

Frederick Buttell, Clare E. B. Cannon, Katherine Rose, Regardt J. Ferreira. COVID-19 and intimate partner violence: Prevalence of resilience and perceived stress during a pandemic. Traumatology. 2021; 27 (1):20-28.

Chicago/Turabian Style

Frederick Buttell; Clare E. B. Cannon; Katherine Rose; Regardt J. Ferreira. 2021. "COVID-19 and intimate partner violence: Prevalence of resilience and perceived stress during a pandemic." Traumatology 27, no. 1: 20-28.

Research article
Published: 06 February 2021 in American Behavioral Scientist
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The purpose of this research is to identify important predictors, related to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, of intimate partner violence (IPV) and to provide insight into communication ecologies that can address IPV in disaster contexts. This study uses a cross-sectional design, with purposive snowball sampling, for primary survey data collected over 10 weeks starting the first week in April 2020. A total of 374 adults participated in the study. Logistic binary regression was used to identify key predictors among sociodemographic characteristics, stress related to COVID-19, and perceived stress of group membership for those who reported IPV experiences. A t test was used to statistically differentiate between IPV-reporters and non-IPV reporters based on perceived stress measured by the Perceived Stress Scale. Results indicated that respondents who reported renting, lost income due to COVID-19, and increased nutritional stress were all more likely to belong to the IPV-reporters group. These findings provide insight into additional stressors related to the ongoing pandemic, such as stress due to income loss, nutritional stress, and renting, and their likelihood of increasing IPV victimization. Taken together, these results indicate that additional communication resources are needed for those affected by IPV. Additional findings and implications are further discussed.

ACS Style

Clare E. B. Cannon; Regardt Ferreira; Frederick Buttell; Jennifer First. COVID-19, Intimate Partner Violence, and Communication Ecologies. American Behavioral Scientist 2021, 65, 992 -1013.

AMA Style

Clare E. B. Cannon, Regardt Ferreira, Frederick Buttell, Jennifer First. COVID-19, Intimate Partner Violence, and Communication Ecologies. American Behavioral Scientist. 2021; 65 (7):992-1013.

Chicago/Turabian Style

Clare E. B. Cannon; Regardt Ferreira; Frederick Buttell; Jennifer First. 2021. "COVID-19, Intimate Partner Violence, and Communication Ecologies." American Behavioral Scientist 65, no. 7: 992-1013.

Journal article
Published: 01 October 2020 in Partner Abuse
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Intimate partner violence (IPV) is a global social problem that results in economic, social, and health costs for individuals and their communities. Moreover, due to the stress, anxiety, and home isolation brought on by COVID-19, recent reports suggest an alarming increase in the number of reported IPV victims and, thus perpetrators the world over. In particular, lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer (LGBTQ) identified people are as or more likely than heterosexuals to experience and perpetrate IPV, while they are less likely to receive media attention, social support, or legal protections. Batterer intervention programs, informed by public policy and laws, are the predominant mechanism of interventions for perpetrators of IPV in the United States. As a vulnerable population with increased health and economic disparities, how do disasters impact treatment of IPV perpetration by LGBTQ people? To answer this question, the current article reviews the literature on batterer intervention programs and IPV in sex and gender minority relationships to better understand how to deliver research-supported treatment during disasters. Next, to reduce such disparities, we provide research-supported recommendations for treating LGBTQ perpetrators of IPV and shed light on meaningful interventions in the COVID-19 context. Implications and recommendations for public policy are further discussed.

ACS Style

Clare Cannon; Fred Buttell. Research-Supported Recommendations for Treating LGBTQ Perpetrators of IPV: Implications for Policy and Practice. Partner Abuse 2020, 11, 485 -504.

AMA Style

Clare Cannon, Fred Buttell. Research-Supported Recommendations for Treating LGBTQ Perpetrators of IPV: Implications for Policy and Practice. Partner Abuse. 2020; 11 (4):485-504.

Chicago/Turabian Style

Clare Cannon; Fred Buttell. 2020. "Research-Supported Recommendations for Treating LGBTQ Perpetrators of IPV: Implications for Policy and Practice." Partner Abuse 11, no. 4: 485-504.

Journal article
Published: 01 October 2020 in Partner Abuse
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A debate persists regarding the effectiveness of batterer intervention programs (BIPs), the predominant form of intervention for individuals who have perpetrated intimate partner violence (IPV). Social science research has identified some promising research trends—for example, the effectiveness of motivational interviewing and process factors that maintain an effective therapist–client alliance, what clients say facilitators can do to keep them engaged and motivated, and, for certain low-risk populations, the viability of couples counseling. Unfortunately, most frontline treatment providers lack access to much of this research, which appears primarily in peer-reviewed journals. A previous national survey of BIPs reported that, on the whole, BIP group facilitators have ample clinical experience, but are poorly informed about IPV risk factors and dynamics; and while they report substantial training, the nature of that training, and the extent to which the training accurately reflects current research, remains unknown. BIPs, and most treatment providers, including licensed mental health professionals, depend on organizations who too often lack reliable, up-to-date information about domestic violence. The Association of Domestic Violence Intervention Providers (ADVIP) was created by the first author to provide a platform where researchers and providers could cooperate by exchanging information and resources. This article reports on findings from a larger follow-up to the 2016 survey, that sought to elicit views on how to increase cooperation between domestic violence scholars and treatment providers and advance evidence-based practice, and to gauge the role of ADVIP in this effort.

ACS Style

John Hamel; Clare Cannon; Fred Buttell; Regardt Ferreira. A survey of IPV Perpetrator Treatment Providers: Ready for Evidence-Based Practice? Partner Abuse 2020, 11, 387 -414.

AMA Style

John Hamel, Clare Cannon, Fred Buttell, Regardt Ferreira. A survey of IPV Perpetrator Treatment Providers: Ready for Evidence-Based Practice? Partner Abuse. 2020; 11 (4):387-414.

Chicago/Turabian Style

John Hamel; Clare Cannon; Fred Buttell; Regardt Ferreira. 2020. "A survey of IPV Perpetrator Treatment Providers: Ready for Evidence-Based Practice?" Partner Abuse 11, no. 4: 387-414.

Research article
Published: 14 August 2020 in Journal of Risk Research
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This study advances scholarly debate on the impact of confidence and trust on flood risk perceptions using data from a random sample of 403 residents in New Orleans, a U.S. coastal city with hundreds of miles of levees to protect the city from flooding. The research focuses on several predictors including specific trust measures of local, state, and federal authorities, sociodemographic characteristics, and experience with flood damage. Using ordinal logistic regression, we find that residents who perceive the levee system as unlikely to protect their homes and the city are significantly more likely to perceive an increased risk of flooding. Previous flood experience, age, female gender, and race were also significant predictors of flood risk perception. In contrast to prevailing risk research that has found that general trust and general confidence negatively affect risk perception, our findings show mixed support for the hypothesis that higher levels of confidence and trust result in lower perceptions of risk. Our findings reveal the nuances of risk perception and suggest that specific notions of trust and confidence can have positive and negative influences on flood risk perception depending on respondent views toward flood protection systems and specific institutions and government agencies.

ACS Style

Clare Cannon; Kevin Fox Gotham; Katie Lauve-Moon; Brad Powers. From the general to the specific: the influence of confidence and trust on flood risk perception. Journal of Risk Research 2020, 1 -19.

AMA Style

Clare Cannon, Kevin Fox Gotham, Katie Lauve-Moon, Brad Powers. From the general to the specific: the influence of confidence and trust on flood risk perception. Journal of Risk Research. 2020; ():1-19.

Chicago/Turabian Style

Clare Cannon; Kevin Fox Gotham; Katie Lauve-Moon; Brad Powers. 2020. "From the general to the specific: the influence of confidence and trust on flood risk perception." Journal of Risk Research , no. : 1-19.

Journal article
Published: 12 August 2020 in Sustainability
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COVID-19 is a pandemic event not seen in a century. This research aims to determine important predictors of resilience towards the COVID 19/Coronavirus Pandemic. This study uses a cross-sectional design, with purposive snowball sampling, for primary survey data collected over 10 weeks starting the first week in April 2020. Participants completed a self-administered questionnaire on demographics and behavioral factors. Resilience was assessed using the 10-item Connor-Davidson Resilience Scale and perceived stress was assessed using the 10-item Perceived Stress Scale. 374 adults participated in the survey. OLS regression was performed to determine key associations among demographic variables, resilience measures, and perceived stress brought on by COVID-19. Age and education were statistically significantly positively associated with resilience, while English as a second language was significantly negatively associated. Participants who reported needing help from family and neighbors, total number of days in lockdown, and higher perceived stress were all significantly negatively associated with resilience. This study adds to immediate predictors of individual resilience to the ongoing infectious disease catastrophe created by the COVID-19 pandemic.

ACS Style

Regardt Ferreira; Clare Cannon; Fred Buttell. COVID-19: Immediate Predictors of Individual Resilience. Sustainability 2020, 12, 6495 .

AMA Style

Regardt Ferreira, Clare Cannon, Fred Buttell. COVID-19: Immediate Predictors of Individual Resilience. Sustainability. 2020; 12 (16):6495.

Chicago/Turabian Style

Regardt Ferreira; Clare Cannon; Fred Buttell. 2020. "COVID-19: Immediate Predictors of Individual Resilience." Sustainability 12, no. 16: 6495.

Research article
Published: 05 June 2020 in Journal of Evidence-Based Social Work
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The purpose of this study was to understand the importance of research-supported practice for batterer intervention programs. This study applied descriptive statistics and chi-square analyses to a novel dataset from the Domestic Violence Perpetrator Treatment Survey (N = 411). This was a 69-item survey developed by domestic violence providers and researchers to understand the role of research-supported practice in the treatment of intimate partner violence (IPV). This study found statistically significant differences between Duluth oriented programs and Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) oriented programs with respect to the importance of research-supported practices and motivational interviewing, a strategy found effective in treatment of IPV by extant research. There appears to have been an evolution among practitioners toward more eclecticism, and an acknowledgment that programs should be research-supported. Implications of this study for education and treatment are discussed.

ACS Style

Clare Cannon; John Hamel; Fred Buttell; Regardt J Ferreira. The Pursuit of Research-supported Treatment in Batterer Intervention: The Role of Professional Licensure and Theoretical Orientation for Duluth and CBT Programs. Journal of Evidence-Based Social Work 2020, 17, 469 -485.

AMA Style

Clare Cannon, John Hamel, Fred Buttell, Regardt J Ferreira. The Pursuit of Research-supported Treatment in Batterer Intervention: The Role of Professional Licensure and Theoretical Orientation for Duluth and CBT Programs. Journal of Evidence-Based Social Work. 2020; 17 (4):469-485.

Chicago/Turabian Style

Clare Cannon; John Hamel; Fred Buttell; Regardt J Ferreira. 2020. "The Pursuit of Research-supported Treatment in Batterer Intervention: The Role of Professional Licensure and Theoretical Orientation for Duluth and CBT Programs." Journal of Evidence-Based Social Work 17, no. 4: 469-485.

Chapter
Published: 29 May 2020 in Intimate Partner Violence and the LGBT+ Community
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Feminist theory is a collection of feminist approaches that have provided important insights to understanding how power and violence operate in intimate partner relationships. Often credited with ending a husband’s right to abuse, second wave feminist theory upheld that women—specifically in (heterosexual) marriages—have the right not to be assaulted regardless of whether the perpetrator is their legal spouse. Recent advances in feminist theory—such as intersectionality, black feminist thought, poststructuralist feminist and queer theories—have sought to center the experiences of women of color and LGBT people. In doing so, they have shed light on the innerworkings of particular systems of oppression (namely racism, homophobia, and transphobia), increasing our knowledge of how power and violence are shaped, and how they shape intimate relationships. This chapter will trace a history of feminist theories from the second wave through black feminist thought to intersectionality and poststructuralist feminist theories to queer theory to illustrate their contributions to knowledge of IPV. Specifically, the chapter will explore how different feminist theories’ conceptions of power and identity enhance our understanding of intimate partner violence.

ACS Style

Clare Cannon. On the Importance of Feminist Theories: Gender, Race, Sexuality and IPV. Intimate Partner Violence and the LGBT+ Community 2020, 37 -52.

AMA Style

Clare Cannon. On the Importance of Feminist Theories: Gender, Race, Sexuality and IPV. Intimate Partner Violence and the LGBT+ Community. 2020; ():37-52.

Chicago/Turabian Style

Clare Cannon. 2020. "On the Importance of Feminist Theories: Gender, Race, Sexuality and IPV." Intimate Partner Violence and the LGBT+ Community , no. : 37-52.

Chapter
Published: 29 May 2020 in Intimate Partner Violence and the LGBT+ Community
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Batterer intervention programs (BIPs) are the predominant form of treatment for perpetrators of intimate partner violence (IPV) in the U.S. because these programs tend to be the go-to treatment option mandated by U.S. courts. Recent scholarship has begun to take seriously that LGBTQ folks use violence to mediate their intimate relationships in comparable or increased rates as opposite-sex relationships. As LGBTQ people are increasingly accepted into society as equal rightsholders, and as such are increasingly arrested at similar rates to perpetrators in opposite-sex relationships, we can expect that LGBTQ people will also similarly be mandated to BIPs for treatment of IPV perpetration. But are BIPs prepared to treat LGBTQ perpetrators of IPV? This chapter will assess current treatment programs for LGBTQ perpetrators of IPV, identify necessary modifications to treatment programs for LGBTQ populations, and discuss important avenues for future research.

ACS Style

Clare Cannon. Learning What You Need: Modifying Treatment Programs for LGBTQ Perpetrators of IPV. Intimate Partner Violence and the LGBT+ Community 2020, 177 -193.

AMA Style

Clare Cannon. Learning What You Need: Modifying Treatment Programs for LGBTQ Perpetrators of IPV. Intimate Partner Violence and the LGBT+ Community. 2020; ():177-193.

Chicago/Turabian Style

Clare Cannon. 2020. "Learning What You Need: Modifying Treatment Programs for LGBTQ Perpetrators of IPV." Intimate Partner Violence and the LGBT+ Community , no. : 177-193.

Journal article
Published: 29 March 2020 in International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
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Increasingly, funders (i.e., national, public funders, such as the National Institutes of Health and National Science Foundation in the U.S.) and scholars agree that single disciplines are ill equipped to study the pressing social, health, and environmental problems we face alone, particularly environmental exposures, increasing health disparities, and climate change. To better understand these pressing social problems, funders and scholars have advocated for transdisciplinary approaches in order to harness the analytical power of diverse and multiple disciplines to tackle these problems and improve our understanding. However, few studies look into how to conduct such research. To this end, this article provides a review of transdisciplinary science, particularly as it relates to environmental research and public health. To further the field, this article provides in-depth information on how to conduct transdisciplinary research. Using the case of a transdisciplinary, community-based, participatory action, environmental health disparities study in California’s Central Valley provides an in-depth look at how to do transdisciplinary research. Working with researchers from the fields of social sciences, public health, biological engineering, and land, air, and water resources, this study aims to answer community residents’ questions related to the health disparities they face due to environmental exposure. Through this case study, I articulate not only the logistics of how to conduct transdisciplinary research but also the logics. The implications for transdisciplinary methodologies in health disparity research are further discussed, particularly in the context of team science and convergence science.

ACS Style

Clare E.B. Cannon. Towards Convergence: How to Do Transdisciplinary Environmental Health Disparities Research. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 2020, 17, 2303 .

AMA Style

Clare E.B. Cannon. Towards Convergence: How to Do Transdisciplinary Environmental Health Disparities Research. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2020; 17 (7):2303.

Chicago/Turabian Style

Clare E.B. Cannon. 2020. "Towards Convergence: How to Do Transdisciplinary Environmental Health Disparities Research." International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 17, no. 7: 2303.

Journal article
Published: 23 December 2019 in Climate Risk Management
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This paper advances scholarly debate on the contradictions of environmental risk management measures by analyzing the determinants of flood insurance coverage among a sample of 403 residents in New Orleans, a city undergoing rapid transformation due to post-Katrina rebuilding efforts and anthropogenic modifications of climate, hydrology, and ecology. The paper focuses on several predictors including subjective flood risk perception, trust in government officials, sociodemographic characteristics, and experience with flood damage. Using binary logistic regression, the results show that the likelihood of having flood insurance coverage is associated with past flood damage and socioeconomic status. Older people (over age 65) are more likely to have flood insurance than younger residents. Race, gender, trust, and perceived flood risk are not statistically significant predictors of flood insurance. We connect our findings to the paradoxes and conflictual dynamics of flood insurance, a major risk mitigation measure. As we point out, in flood-prone cities like New Orleans, flood insurance operates as a double whammy: uninsured or underinsured homes face pervasive risk of both flooding and rising insurance premiums under the conditions of global climate change.

ACS Style

Clare Cannon; Kevin Fox Gotham; Katie Lauve-Moon; Bradford Powers. The climate change double whammy: Flood damage and the determinants of flood insurance coverage, the case of post-Katrina New Orleans. Climate Risk Management 2019, 27, 100210 .

AMA Style

Clare Cannon, Kevin Fox Gotham, Katie Lauve-Moon, Bradford Powers. The climate change double whammy: Flood damage and the determinants of flood insurance coverage, the case of post-Katrina New Orleans. Climate Risk Management. 2019; 27 ():100210.

Chicago/Turabian Style

Clare Cannon; Kevin Fox Gotham; Katie Lauve-Moon; Bradford Powers. 2019. "The climate change double whammy: Flood damage and the determinants of flood insurance coverage, the case of post-Katrina New Orleans." Climate Risk Management 27, no. : 100210.

Articles
Published: 03 July 2019 in Journal of Evidence-Based Social Work
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Purpose: This study examines similarities and differences of parenting attitudes between male and female perpetrators of intimate partner violence in a batterer intervention program. Method: This research utilized a cross-sectional, secondary analysis of 257 men and women. Results: Logistic regression analyses indicate a statistically significant model for predicting membership in female cohort of the sample using demographics, CTS2 physical assault and injury subscales, and APPI-2 scores; and, demonstrated that association in the AAPI-2 high-risk category can be predicted by sex, education, number of children, and CTS2 sexual coercion. Discussion: Findings suggest that female batterers are more likely to use physical violence in negotiating conflict than male batterers and are more likely to experience injury. Conclusions: Female batterers and male batters need different treatment modalities to address these findings. Implications including targeted interventions for perpetrators based on the kinds of violence they experience and perpetuate are further discussed.

ACS Style

Clare Cannon; Regardt J. Ferreira; Fred Buttell. Differences and Similarities between Male and Female Intimate Partner Violence Perpetration and Parenting Attitudes. Journal of Evidence-Based Social Work 2019, 16, 442 -459.

AMA Style

Clare Cannon, Regardt J. Ferreira, Fred Buttell. Differences and Similarities between Male and Female Intimate Partner Violence Perpetration and Parenting Attitudes. Journal of Evidence-Based Social Work. 2019; 16 (4):442-459.

Chicago/Turabian Style

Clare Cannon; Regardt J. Ferreira; Fred Buttell. 2019. "Differences and Similarities between Male and Female Intimate Partner Violence Perpetration and Parenting Attitudes." Journal of Evidence-Based Social Work 16, no. 4: 442-459.

Journal article
Published: 01 April 2019 in Partner Abuse
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ObjectiveThe purpose of this study was to determine available services for LGBTQ clients in domestic violence batterer intervention programs across North America and to ascertain which theoretical models informed these services.MethodData collected from the North American Survey of DomesticViolence Intervention Programs were analyzed using deductive and inductive coding. Using guidelines established by the American Association for Public Opinion Research, the response rate for mailings was 20% and for e-mails was 45%.ResultsRespondents indicated a range of approaches to LGBTQ clients from doing nothing specific to serving LGBTQ clients with one-on-one sessions.ConclusionsRecommendations include more LGBTQ facilitators, developing curricula that addresses homophobia, issues related to family of origin, and foster methods of outreach to the LGBTQ community to make those affected aware of treatment possibilities. Moreover, evidence suggests a disconnect between practitioners and researchers when it comes to defining and treating the problem of intimate partner violence in LGBTQ relationships.ImplicationsPractitioners should not only undergo cultural training and provide LGBTQ-specific curricula, but also engage how and why such social inequality exists and persists. Further implications for policy and treatment are discussed.

ACS Style

Clare E. B. Cannon. What Services Exist for LGBTQ Perpetrators of Intimate Partner Violence in Batterer Intervention Programs Across North America? A Qualitative Study. Partner Abuse 2019, 10, 222 -242.

AMA Style

Clare E. B. Cannon. What Services Exist for LGBTQ Perpetrators of Intimate Partner Violence in Batterer Intervention Programs Across North America? A Qualitative Study. Partner Abuse. 2019; 10 (2):222-242.

Chicago/Turabian Style

Clare E. B. Cannon. 2019. "What Services Exist for LGBTQ Perpetrators of Intimate Partner Violence in Batterer Intervention Programs Across North America? A Qualitative Study." Partner Abuse 10, no. 2: 222-242.

Review
Published: 18 May 2018 in Current Psychiatry Reports
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We review topical evidence on ethical issues in conducting disaster research with children and families affected by natural disasters, with an emphasis on analyzing specific vulnerabilities associated with children and families affected by disasters, identifying significant findings and trends of ethical guidelines and approaches, and discussing key observations into ethical research in a disaster setting. Current evidence indicates that there is a wide range of research methods for child disaster studies. Vulnerability as a concept in child disaster studies is more prevalent with several scholars underscoring the need for an ethical approach to disaster research. Current disaster research evidence suggests that there is specifically an interest in conducting disaster research with children and families. With the increase in investigations, it is strongly recommended that investigators adhere to ethical standards in research practice when conducting research with vulnerable populations (e.g., children) within a postdisaster context.

ACS Style

Regardt J. Ferreira; Fred Buttell; Clare Cannon. Ethical Issues in Conducting Research With Children and Families Affected by Disasters. Current Psychiatry Reports 2018, 20, 42 .

AMA Style

Regardt J. Ferreira, Fred Buttell, Clare Cannon. Ethical Issues in Conducting Research With Children and Families Affected by Disasters. Current Psychiatry Reports. 2018; 20 (6):42.

Chicago/Turabian Style

Regardt J. Ferreira; Fred Buttell; Clare Cannon. 2018. "Ethical Issues in Conducting Research With Children and Families Affected by Disasters." Current Psychiatry Reports 20, no. 6: 42.

Research article
Published: 29 April 2018 in Research on Social Work Practice
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Purpose: This study sought to investigate similarities and differences among race, gender, parenting attitudes, and conflict negotiation tactics of perpetrators of intimate partner violence in a batterer intervention program. Method: This research utilized a nonequivalent, control group secondary analysis of 238 women and men. Results: Logistic regression indicated the following: (1) An increased likelihood for scoring higher on the Conflict Tactics Scale-2 (CTS-2), Physical Assault subscale, and high-risk Adult–Adolescent Parenting Inventory-2 (AAPI-2) parenting group for those in the African American category compared to the White category; (2) African American women are more likely to be unemployed, score higher on the CTS-2 Physical Assault subscale, and in the high-risk AAPI-2 parenting group than African American men; and (3) White women, compared to White men, are more likely to experience injury and to score in the high-risk AAPI-2 group. Conclusions: Critical race theory provides a necessary understanding of these findings within structural inequality in the United States. Further results and implications are discussed.

ACS Style

Clare Cannon; Regardt J. Ferreira; Fred Buttell. Critical Race Theory, Parenting, and Intimate Partner Violence: Analyzing Race and Gender. Research on Social Work Practice 2018, 30, 122 -134.

AMA Style

Clare Cannon, Regardt J. Ferreira, Fred Buttell. Critical Race Theory, Parenting, and Intimate Partner Violence: Analyzing Race and Gender. Research on Social Work Practice. 2018; 30 (1):122-134.

Chicago/Turabian Style

Clare Cannon; Regardt J. Ferreira; Fred Buttell. 2018. "Critical Race Theory, Parenting, and Intimate Partner Violence: Analyzing Race and Gender." Research on Social Work Practice 30, no. 1: 122-134.

Research article
Published: 18 April 2018 in Research on Social Work Practice
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This study sought to investigate similarities and differences among race, gender, parenting attitudes, and conflict negotiation tactics of perpetrators of intimate partner violence in a batterer intervention program. This research utilized a nonequivalent, control group secondary analysis of 238 women and men. Logistic regression indicated (1) an increased likelihood for scoring higher on the Conflict Tactics Scale (CTS-2) physical assault subscale and Adult-Adolescent Parenting Inventory-2 (AAPI-2) high-risk parenting group for those in the African American category compared to the White category; (2) African American women are more likely to be unemployed, score higher on the CTS-2 Physical Assault subscale, and in the high-risk AAPI-2 parenting group than African American men; and (3) White women are more likely to experience injury and score in the high-risk AAPI-2 group compared to White men. Critical race theory provides a necessary understanding of these findings within structural inequality in the United States. Further results and implications are discussed.

ACS Style

Clare Cannon; Regardt J. Ferreira; Fred Buttell. Critical Race Theory, Parenting, and Intimate Partner Violence: Analyzing Race and Gender. Research on Social Work Practice 2018, 29, 590 -602.

AMA Style

Clare Cannon, Regardt J. Ferreira, Fred Buttell. Critical Race Theory, Parenting, and Intimate Partner Violence: Analyzing Race and Gender. Research on Social Work Practice. 2018; 29 (5):590-602.

Chicago/Turabian Style

Clare Cannon; Regardt J. Ferreira; Fred Buttell. 2018. "Critical Race Theory, Parenting, and Intimate Partner Violence: Analyzing Race and Gender." Research on Social Work Practice 29, no. 5: 590-602.

Journal article
Published: 14 March 2018 in Hispanic Journal of Behavioral Sciences
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From 2013 to 2017, thousands of unaccompanied children (UCs) arrived in Louisiana from Latin America. This research aims to increase understanding of experiences of Latino/a youth who came to New Orleans during that migratory peak. This study offers additional background information on the violent circumstances that forced youth to migrate and insight into youth perceptions of public safety for stakeholders in law and public policy. By triangulating secondary data on crime in Mexico, Central America, and New Orleans with primary survey data (N = 52), this study found that the majority of surveyed youth (79.2 %) consider New Orleans safer than their country of origin. This finding, among other significant findings related to violence and perceived effectiveness of law enforcement, can be used to advise stakeholders when considering legal options for youth. Moreover, this study generates applied research that contextualizes immigrant youth experiences and their perceptions of safety, offering a methodology for future scholarship.

ACS Style

Clare Cannon; Sarah Fouts; Miranda Stramel. Informed Gatekeepers and Transnational Violence: Using Perceptions of Safety of Latino/a Youth in Determining Legal Cases. Hispanic Journal of Behavioral Sciences 2018, 40, 134 -149.

AMA Style

Clare Cannon, Sarah Fouts, Miranda Stramel. Informed Gatekeepers and Transnational Violence: Using Perceptions of Safety of Latino/a Youth in Determining Legal Cases. Hispanic Journal of Behavioral Sciences. 2018; 40 (2):134-149.

Chicago/Turabian Style

Clare Cannon; Sarah Fouts; Miranda Stramel. 2018. "Informed Gatekeepers and Transnational Violence: Using Perceptions of Safety of Latino/a Youth in Determining Legal Cases." Hispanic Journal of Behavioral Sciences 40, no. 2: 134-149.